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Big Red
This is what was cooking in Big Tina the other day.
I couldn’t find a nice rich red in a yarn soft enough for my purposes, so I dyed up my own.
One hank Aslan Trends “Invernal.” 50% angora, 25% wool, 25% polyamide.
The actual hank is a little darker than it appears here, but this is close enough.
I’m really liking this “twice dyed” technique I’m working out.
Big Red
Swatch
Swatch of Greena Tina. #7 needles gets 4.5 stitches to the inch. This knits up very prettily.
It’s an absolutely beautiful morning, with intermittent clouds and a temperature around 65 degrees. I put a few pounds back on over the summer when I couldn’t get away from the house and it was so hot, but I’m slowly inching my way back down again now that’s school’s back in. This weather shouldn’t go to waste – I’m going running while it’s still sunny and cool. After that, it’s back home to pack up a couple more kits. Cooler weather always makes people want to knit more.
FO: Greena Tina

This is two skeins of Cascade 220 superwash dyed in my dyepot Big Tina. Doing these right after the rose-colored skein of non-superwash Cascade 220 taught me more about the difference in uptake in superwash and conventional wool and how the addition of acid early in the process affects strike time.
I was going for green with striations that were variations in shade but not entirely different colors. When it first came out I thought the saturation wasn’t strong enough, so I gave it another bath in a light sky blue. It turned out a little bluer than I was anticipating (although the picture makes it look bluer than life), but I’m very pleased with the result. I’m all about the blue.
I have a pattern in mind for this, assuming I can clear the decks of Jayne work.
I learn a little more each time I dye. Perhaps it’s time to start buying in bulk and increase the frequency of my dyeing. If I do that, I’ll probably have to start selling, though – I can’t use all the yarn I’ve got, I can’t clutter up the house with more. Big Tina will easily hold sweater quantities or permit me to do larger dye lots at once.
I’m not where I want to be yet, but learning is a process that never ends. I’m feeling like what I can make beautiful yarn while I improve. Maybe it is time to release a few skeins into the wild.
For now though, it’s back to knitting Jayne hats.
Winding ettiquette
Greena Tina.
Emerald with a little sky blue, poured in after the yarn was settled. That dye was uptaken, the yarn stirred, then added sky blue with a little emerald.
I went out to the store and when I came home the dyepot had gotten hotter than I intended, and the house smelled like a boiled sheep. Thank heavens the yarn was superwash. My husband (rightly) didn’t touch it since he didn’t know exactly what was supposed to happen.
I’m very curious to see how this all turns out.
Dye, Big Tina! Dye!!
School’s In!
Em got off to school just fine. She opted to wear her pink and white striped slip-on shoes, which are too small, but I let it go. If she wants to keep wearing them we can get a new pair, assuming they’re still in stores now that summer’s over. As we pulled up, she said, “I am too excited for the first day!” in a very happy way. Here’s hoping that bodes well.
As for me, I have a mountain of work to catch up on. Jayne hats, Jayne kits, stamping up Jayne packages… but I’m taking a little time just for myself, too, since frankly I deserve a vacation day or two after a summer of nonstop Momming. Yeah, you heard me. I made Mom a verb.

Behold! This is the 22-quart stainless steel Tramontina stock pot that my mother got me for Christmas so I’d have something big to dye in. I’m calling her Big Tina. The stockpot, not my mother. I’m test-driving this baby with some Cascade 220 superwash wool. It’ll be a fun experiment. This one will be stovetop, but I foresee a time when I borrow my husband’s propane burner he uses in brewing (did I mention that my husband is an award-winning homebrewer?) and dye outside over an open flame.
But now, it’s time to break for lunch. And play some tunes. Why? Because if I want to crank up Commie Drives a Nova by Ike Reilly I can do it, as there are no tender young things walking around to potentially scar for life. School rules!